Aria leaned into the table with a smirk on her face as Marian left after mentioning she had to "visit a friend". Robert thought he was so clever, as if none of the Merry Men had the slightest inch of smarts to figure out his little game, but you can never outsmart the smart. One time, when the diner had been empty and Aria wasn't needed, as soon as Marian had left she had vanished into the backroom and into what she had assigned as her "little office" at the far back of the kitchen. It was actually a supply closet, but it was efficient for what Aria wanted to use it for. She had accessed the city's camera systems and practically stalked Marian's entire route - following her to where she'd settle with a homeless man, and they'd converse. Originally it hadn't bothered Aria, she'd dismissed the homeless man as some insignificant character that Marian had taken an interest in - but when she'd decided to stalk her "boss" instead of her best friend out of pure boredom, she'd realized it was far deeper. Although Marian was presumably unaware, Aria had discovered that Robert was this homeless individual. She was glad that she'd put hidden cameras in Robert's hangouts when she had, because now he couldn't hide anything from her. She kept it secret though, she didn't think Allan needed to know Robert's dirty little secret. It'd only make things severely worse and it'd possibly throw the whole Merry Men scheme up in the air and expose it to Marian, and although Marian was Aria's closest friend - she couldn't foresee what her reaction would be. Her eyes shifted onto Allan to her left for a few moments, then back to the door. "I hope you know how to dance - because if my parents find out I'm there they'll want me to. And I'm not dancing with one of the random inbred posh boys that they'll try and pair me up with. Okay?" She grumbled, pushing up to her feet. "This also means I'm gonna' have to investigate the convention center. Do you wanna help, or would you rather stick to your coffee?" She kept her voice low, in case one of the few customers they ever really got overheard.